HOUSEHOLD WORDS: Women Write from and for the Kitchen

Acknowledgments
I am indebted to many people for their contributions and support during
the preparation of the exhibition. Several students have facilitated my
research by making the rare cookbook collection the basis of their
independent studies. Karoline Wallace has worked on the exhibition with
me as diligently and as thoughtfully as if it were her own. It has
benefited from her ideas, insights, and enthusiasm, in particular, the
section on still-room books. To her I also owe my first experience with a
computerized data base with all of its delights and woes. As she said to
me, "Computers do what you tell them to, not what you want them
to." Dana Plansky researched the area of domestic medicine and parts
of the exhibition reflect her interests and data-gathering. Jerry Drew
read and researched many of the manuscripts in the collection and provided
an historical context. Evelyn Feldman, of the Rosenbach Museum and
Library in Philadelphia, graciously shared with me ideas and bibliographic
data. For tracking down sources in American culinary history and
selecting sumptuous menus for the reception and dinner, I am grateful to
Suzanne Weltman.

I have been deeply influenced by scholarship in the fields of culinary
history and women's studies. Most notable among them are the works of
Mary Anna DuSablon, Lynette Hunter, Jan and Daniel Longone and Glenna
Matthews.

The texts have benefited from Katherine Pollak's keen critical eye and
relentless search for "the perfect word." Her suggestions made
clarity inevitable. For their thoughtful readings and comments I would
also like to thank: Regina Bendix, Lynne Farrington, Margaret Kreusi, John
Pollack, Nancy Shawcross, Lisa Ratmansky, Elisabeth Rozin, Katherine
Schultz, Dan Traister, Nancy Watterson, and Yael Zerubavel. Greg Bear
provided expert guidance in the design of the cases and the catalogue. To
Regina and John Bendix I am grateful for the translation of Anna
Weckerin's cookbook and for stimulating discussions about these texts.

I am grateful to Michael Ryan and Dan Traister for the invitation to
curate the exhibition and to Richard Hendrix for his generosity in
allowing me time to work on the project. A special thank you to Denise
Miller for tending the MLA program and its students while I was tilling
other gardens.

A never-ending thank you to Jeff Shultz who read and reread the text,
fixed Word files and printers, and who provided support, encouragement and
food throughout the months of the project.

Janet Theophano
Department of Folklore and Folklife
Associate Director, College of General Studies
University of Pennsylvania